Nyesha Bates (l.), Rahmel Ashby’s mother, leaves court with her son (second from l.) and other family members after he was acquitted on charges Thursday related to a triple shooting.

A Brooklyn high school football star was cleared of all charges for a triple shooting, but has another hurdle to overcome — a gun charge.

Rahmel Ashby cried tears of joy as the jury unanimously agreed there was not enough evidence to prove he shot Quinesha Reeves, Monay Langhorne and Rogelio King on April 29, 2014.

“It was easy. Just check the facts. Once we heard all the evidence there was no proof he did this,” said one of the jurors after the verdict was handed down in Brooklyn Supreme Court.

“The stories were too conflicting, too much reasonable doubt to convict him," said another female juror, who asked to remain anonymous.

The Waverly Ave.-orchestrated brawl was recorded on a cellphone video as Ashby's sister Nyesha Bates went toe-to-toe with her frenemy Imani Lewis-Waldon for two rounds.

During the third round, other girls who were summoned to the fight by Bates and Lewis-Waldon jumped in, causing total chaos.

Ashby, 18, will now face another judge and possibly a jury for a pending criminal possession of a weapon charge he accumulated on Oct. 30, 2015.

(Jeff Bachner/for New York Daily News)

As the camera stopped recording, eight shots rang out.

Throughout the two-week trial, the jurors listened to testimony from almost all the witnesses and needed to hear them again during their deliberations. At 10:12 a.m. on Thursday, they reached a verdict.

"I'm just glad the jury listened to the evidence and believed in the presumption of innocence," said Ashby's attorney Ken Montgomery, who had no-holds-barred cross-examination with the prosecutor's witnesses.

Ashby, 18, who attends Grand Street Campus HS, will now face another judge and possibly a jury for a pending criminal possession of a weapon charge he accumulated on Oct. 30, 2015.

“We disagree with the jury’s verdict, but respect its decision,” said a spokesperson for the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office.

If convicted on gun charges, Ashby faces up to 15 years in prison.

(Jesse Ward/for New York Daily News)

Ashby was allegedly seen on Waverly Ave. with his hand on a .380 caliber semi-automatic pistol before he attempted to run away, according to court documents.

He is scheduled to appear in court on that matter on June 28.

Ashby and the officer struggled when the muzzle of the gun was "pressed against the officer's chest," according to court documents.